In English, there are nine basic types of words. These types are called parts of speech. The parts of speech are nouns, articles, pronouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, prepositions, conjunctions, and interjections.

Nouns, Articles, and Pronouns

Nouns (for example, boy or tree) stand for people, places, or things. They are identifying words or names and fall into two categories: common and proper. A common noun is any general word or name (president, country, clock). A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing (Abraham Lincoln, Germany, Big Ben). Proper nouns are capitalized when they are written.

Nouns can be singular or plural (house, houses). Nouns can also have ownership of other nouns. This is called possession. An apostrophe followed by an s is used to show possession (a girl’sbook, the farmer’scow). Articles (a, an, the) tell whether a noun is general (atree) or specific (thetree). Pronouns (he, she, it) replace nouns (sheplayed).

Verbs

Verbs are action words (laugh, grow) that tell what nouns or pronouns do. They create the information in a sentence. Verbs can take different forms to tell when the action is taking place. This is called the tense. The main tenses are past, present, and future (shewalked, shewalks, shewill walk).

A verb can have an active or a passive voice. The active voice is when the subject of the sentence is doing the action. “The man killed the bear” is written in the active voice. The passive voice is when the subject is being acted upon. “The bear was killed by the man” is in the passive voice.

Adjectives and Adverbs

Adjectives and adverbs are descriptive words. Adjectives (young, green) describe nouns or pronouns. They may come before the noun (theredwagon) or after the noun (the wagon isred). Adverbs (loudly, quickly) describe verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs. Some adverbs are made by adding an -ly to an adjective. However, most adverbs do not have a form that is easy to spot.

Other Types of Words

Prepositions (on, in) tell how the words in a sentence relate to one another in time or space. Conjunctions (and, but, or) combine parts of a sentence, or whole sentences, into one sentence. They also show how the parts are connected. Interjections (hey, ouch) are added to a sentence to show emotion.

Punctuation helps a reader understand the meaning of a sentence. Sentences can end in three different ways. Statements end with a period: She loves to cook. Questions end with a question mark: Where are you going? Statements with strong feeling end with an exclamation point: I am so excited!

Punctuation marks are also used within sentences. Commas (,) are used frequently. They separate lists (He bought milk, coffee, and juice.) and clauses (Abby wanted to go to the movies, but Katie wanted to go to the art museum.). Quotation marks express a person’s exact words: Mark said, “I love to read the newspaper on Sunday.” Parentheses mark off additional information that is not part of the subject-verb pattern: Janice noticed that her pets (a dog and two cats) had gone missing from the yard.

Other punctuation marks include the colon, semicolon, and dash. The colon is used to introduce a list (Henry likes the following colors: red, yellow, and purple.). It is also used in the writing of time (1:15) and to separate a book’s main title from its subtitle. A semicolon separates parts, or clauses, of a compound sentence: The Bears won; the Cubs lost. Semicolons also separate a list that contains commas: He went on vacation to Berlin, Germany; Paris, France; and Madrid, Spain.

Dashes can be long or short. A long dash marks a sudden break in thought: She is going to the beach today—she hates to be indoors in the summer. A short dash is used to show a range of numbers, such as 1923–34 and pages 3–82. Hyphens are shorter dashes that are used to divide or to connect related words (blue-green, great-grandmother).

In English, grammar mainly involves the order of words. The meaning of a sentence changes if the word order changes. Here are two sentences: “The car hit the tree.” “The tree hit the car.” These two sentences have the same words. But because the word order is different, the meaning is different.

The word order also decides whether the sentence makes sense. In English, the subject, or main noun, of a sentence usually comes before the verb. For example, “Ran quickly the girl” does not make sense because the subject (the girl) comes after the verb (ran). Other languages have different rules about word order.

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